Nesbitt v. Hudson

230 S.W. 746, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 234
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1921
DocketNo. 8483.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 746 (Nesbitt v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nesbitt v. Hudson, 230 S.W. 746, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 234 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

On a former day of this term the court delivered its opinion reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding this cause; and we directed the entry of judgment to that effect. Upon further consideration of the case we now find it desirable to withdraw the previously delivered opinion and substitute for it the opinion expressed below. We maintain the same conclusion formerly arrived at, and leave the judgment heretofore rendered undisturbed.

Appellant sued appellee upon a promissory note executed and deposited with a written contract between appellant and appellee in the First National Bank of Thornton, Tex., as stakeholder. The contract embodied the terms of an agreement between the parties whereby appellant was to exchange a house and four lots in Waco for a farm in Limestone county, together with certain live stock and implements owned by appellee. The contract, deposited in escrow at the bank, with the note of each of the parties, contained the following clause:

“Each party, as an evidence of good faith in carrying out the terms of this contract, herewith makes and delivers with this contract his said promissory note in the sum of $1,000, payable to the other party respectively, pledged as liquidated damages for failure by either party to comply with this contract, to be held in escrow deposited in the First National Bank, of Thornton, Tex., until said deal is completed. Said notes to be null and void if said titles cannot be made acceptable to the respective parties hereto.”

The original petition, the answer filed by appellee, and the supplemental petition filed by appellant in answer thereto put in -issue the whole transaction, and are such, we think, in effect, as to make the suit one for agreed liquidated damages claimed by virtue of the alleged breach of the executory contract for the exchange of the respective properties, the contract and note evidencing the amount of damages to be due upon the breach of the contract being competently shown. ' .

The facts stated below appear to have been established by the evidence. Appellee listed his land for sale or exchange with A. P. Smyth, a real estate agent, in Thornton, Limestone county. Appellant had his property in the hands of T. H. Vinson, real estate agent in Waco, for sale or exchange. In the transaction involved in this suit, it seems that Smyth and Vinson were in partnership, an' agreement existing between them to divide equally the total commissions to be received from the two parties, a fact then unknown to appellee. A few days before the note and contract were executed, Smyth and appellee Hudson and appellee’s son-in-law went to Waco to look at certain other property for which appellee contemplated exchanging his farm. Appellee and his son-in-law on this occasion were induced by Smyth to inspect appellant’s property. Shortly thereafter appellant went to Limestone county, accompanied by Vinson, to look at appellee’s farm. He went over the farm and after he had inspected it he and appellee agreed upon the terms of the trade. They then’went to Thornton and executed a written contract, mutually binding themselves to execute warranty deeds to each other conveying the respective properties; also agreeing that possession should be delivered “as soon as the respective titles are acceptable and proper deeds of conveyance delivered to each;” providing in the agree- *748 merit for abstracts to be supplied by each to tbe other; and further agreeing that each should receive the 1918 rents from the property to be conveyed to him, appellee to receive the rents from the Waco property after 'April 15, 1918. To secure performance of the agreement thus stated, the penalty clause above copied was inserted, and the note executed.

Appellee repudiated "the contract, and refused to do any of the things stipulated in the written agreement. At the time of the repudiation he gave no reason for it. The only reason assigned for it by him in his testimony is contained in the following excerpt:

“We were to close up the deal as soon as the papers could be gotten up, but no specified time. We were to get up our papers as soon as we could. I came up to Groesbeck a day or two afterwards to see about getting up an abstract. Smyth, my wife, my son-in-law Bas-com, and I came up together, and I arranged for an abstract. When I went home the night after the contract was signed, my wife was dissatisfied with the way the horses were put in the trade. Smyth had said it was best for them to be put in that way, in the way the land was put in, and on the way up to Groesbeck she got after Smyth about that, and he said if she was dissatisfied with the way the horses went in, he could get her out for $150, that there was a gap left open, and my wife said, Wes.’ He said the date in the note had been left blank, the maturity date of the note. Up to that time I did not know that Smyth and Vinson were jointly interested in the transfer of the property. Right then I commenced to mistrust him, and you would too. If there had not been something wrong he would not have said he would get me out for $150. My wife then said when she got to Groesbeck she would go and see Kit Bradley, and he said, ‘If you have to have Kit Bradley bobbing up in it, I am not going to have anything to do with iti’ I never did tell Mr. Nesbitt I would not carry out the terms of the contract. We got Judge Tucker to write him afterwards. The letter introduced here by the plaintiff is the letter I had Mr. Tucker to write. That was the first time, and I never did carry out the contract. My reason for not carrying it out was we found there was something wrong.”

He further testified as follows:

“I first told him (Smyth) I would make the trade after’ we had got to Thornton. I had seen the house at that time, and had gone through a part of it, but had not noticed it because I had no dream of trading for it. After I came back home, I made up my mind to take it, if they would treat me right. After I had made this note and contract, if everything had been straight I would have consummated the deal at that particular time. I had good faith in him at the time, and intended to go ahead and have my abstract made and deeds signed, and close up that trade, if everything went straight on. With reference to whether or not I knew when I signed that contract, I was bound by it, and that, being 65 years of age, I had transacted business long enough to know, I will say, if the contract had come up straight. As far as I know, everything had been straight about the contract until this conversation between Mr. Smyth and my wife took place as we were coming to Groesbeck two or three days later to have the abstract prepared. No, sir; everything was not straight at that time, so far as I knew. My wife did not want to have it made. After we got back home that night my wife said that the horses could be taken off the farm and we could not get one cent for them; that there was not a thing binding on these horses. Yes, sir; my wife was dissatisfied with the trade, and before it was made. It was discussed there in her presence, but they did not do as she had told them to do. Yes, sir; it was satisfactory to me if they had come straight, and It would have been satisfactory to me to close the trade as it was written, if they had come clean. She told Mr. Smyth she was not pleased with it, and he .said that he had left a gap down and could get us out for $150.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 746, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nesbitt-v-hudson-texapp-1921.